No country which still has the death penalty for any crime is allowed to join the European Union. So I don't think they like it.
Some capital punishment research questions that can provide insights into the effectiveness and ethical implications of the practice include: Does the death penalty act as a deterrent to violent crime? What are the socio-economic and racial disparities in the application of the death penalty? How accurate and reliable is the process of determining guilt in capital cases? What are the psychological effects on individuals involved in the execution process? What are the long-term societal impacts of using capital punishment as a form of justice?
The death rate of Brazil is 6
769
DEATH
The time required for research and presentation would make the complete answer a treatise rather than a simple response. Even if we simplify and go for religions and their ethics, we would end up with a vast multitude of different ethics. As people interpret religious texts differently, various countries, and even within the same country, interpret the same text differently. A crude example of this could be Rape: In most of the western world, rape is a punishable offense. Most normally, the victim is a female, and the male performing the rape will be punished. In some muslim countries, their interpretation is much more harsh, where they look at the female as an offender too, since she has had sex, often without being married. In some countries, this is punishable by death - and even if the "public" law is against so called Sharia Law, the smaller local communities within a country might sentence death-penalty due to "tradition" Even some highly westernized and modern countries like the United Arab Emirates stick to the punishment of rape-victims, although not death-penalty, it is tradition that the female victim get a stronger/longer sentence than the male offender. The bible and other religious books are in most a code of ethics to live by. The problem is that the interpretation can be so different from person to person, hence we would need the size of 100 bibles at least only to describe and explain the interpretations of all the ethics, and this only for the bible.
Spain is a member of the European Union. The Death Penalty has been outlawed in the EU.
All states, the Commonwealth and the military have all outlawed the death penalty.
There are a lot of countries that it is abolished in but the democratic countries,most European (all of the European union) countries do not have it. e.g United Kingdom, Germany,France etc.
While he was governor of Texas, he allowed many people to be put to death. I suspect he supports it then ...
Maybe you were asking why are only certain countries in the European Union? The European Union is a political and economic organization consisting of 27 countries in Europe. To join the European Union countries must have fairly strong economies, be democratic, have abolished the death penalty and other cruel practices and have low(ish) levels of corruption.
Initially in favor, Truman Capote later changed his stance on the death penalty after investigating and writing about the Clutter family murders in his book "In Cold Blood." This experience led him to oppose the death penalty due to the personal and moral conflicts he faced.
The death penalty for murder was abolished under the 1965 Murder (Abolition of the Death Penalty Act). The death penalty for treason and a variety of other offences was abolished under the 1998 Crime and Disorder Act. For the absolute avoidance of doubt the death penalty in the UK was absolutely abolished for all offences when the UK became a signatory to the European Convention on Human Rights by enacting the 1998 Human Rights Act.
Texas is the state that uses the death penalty more than any other in the United States. It has executed more inmates than any other state since the death penalty was reinstated in 1976. Texas has a significantly higher number of death row inmates and executions compared to other states, reflecting its strong stance on capital punishment.
For. If most of the citizens in Texas did not want the death penalty, there would be no death penalty.
No,the state of Missouri does not have the death penalty.
Now, no death penalty in Romania.
No,the state of Nebraska does not have the death penalty.